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Wednesday 22 September 2010

A whiff of redemption from my alma mater

Jon Snow Presenter

I have finally darkened the door of the university from which I was expelled 39 years ago.

Liverpool University has changed beyond recognition. The pre-Heseltine saplings that littered the campus are now grown into verdant green trees, only polluted by the embarrassing number of staff and student cars sheltering beneath.

I was in Liverpool to give a talk at Tate Liverpool (an amazingly vibrant and packed event in what is one of the cornerstones of the new Liverpool).

I was given a guided tour around the campus, the details of which had not changed hugely – and where they had, they had done so very much for the better.

I visited the law faculty where my meteoric ascent as an aspiring lawyer was cut off in its prime. And although students were not in residence, there was a remarkable seminar going on, into which I was invited.

It was a group of senior military lawyers in the British army, studying the developments in human rights on the battlefield.

Each of the men and one women present had experienced sitting at the right hand of the commanding officer and signing off on targets which complied with the Geneva convention and much else. We had a fascinating discussion about Iran and other matters.

I found the city of Liverpool transformed. The new shopping centre has elevated the city from 60th most preferred shopping destination in the UK to sixth.

There are more galleries springing up, and although the taxi driver spoke of recession, it felt nothing like the city did in the boom times of the early seventies – and experience from which Liverpudlians were largely excluded.

Today the TUC is meeting in the brand-new conference centre. Somehow the capital of Merseyside has become a destination and not a place you visit by accident.

And for me, I had experienced something of a whiff of redemption, at peace with my alma mater.

Related posts:

  1. Assailed by the whiff of toxic debt
  2. Viewing Britain from a Preston perspective
  3. Our love of hierarchy means little will change
  4. Liverpool: funny, brave, but out on a limb
  5. The ExCeL centre – a symbol of where we are

There are no comments on this post

  1. Dave W at 5:53 pm

    I enjoyed the chapter regarding your rustication in your autobiography and became mildly saddened that such a culture no longer exists, much more exciting than graduating into a market with no jobs.

  2. Kristine Byrne at 8:16 pm

    Funny how some things stay with one…no matter what else happens later..

  3. Saltaire Sam at 11:13 pm

    Time they awarded you an honorary degree!

  4. Patrick at 1:26 am

    I always like places as they used to be. Take Norwich – it now has (effectively) three shopping centres. When the existing town was good enough. Once it was enchanting with a surprise round every corner – now it’s just the same round every corner.
    …..but I’m just a grumpy old git living permanently in the past, still, I’m only an hour away from Liverpool, it’s about time I went there. It’s the changing at Preston that’s the drag!

  5. Stephen at 6:03 pm

    At peace with Liverpool – does that mean the iconic turquoise three-quarter length sweater has been finally laid to rest?

  6. phil dicks at 5:41 pm

    Good point, but Norwich does have a surprise around every conrner – just not the surprise you may have expected.

  7. [...] cared. I had been thrown out of university for an anti-apartheid sit-in. When I saw him, I knew it was him, striding, arm held high , finger’s intertwined with [...]

  8. EFH at 9:49 pm

    How lucky you are! I stayed in my law faculty( years 5-7 of a US graduate education). Now after all this time, I’m amazed that so many of us who want to do something for the world end up there. It’s also amazing how many of us–like you and myself–end up doing something completely different. Well done!

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